Brice Burrell
Member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2007
- Messages
- 7,385
Making a cabinet door with the Festool OF 2200 router.
I recently needed to make a mockup of a cabinet door for a client. I thought this might be a good time to try out an idea I?ve been thinking about for some time now-making a cabinet door freehand with a handheld router. Not just any router, the Festool OF 2200 router.
The mockup was made from 3/4? pine. I have an American Eagle rail and stile bit set with a bead profile and CMT 3 ?? raised panel bit that I used for this project. The OF 2200 was very easy to fine tune the height of the bits and the extended base gave the router extra support. That?s just what I needed for this project. Here are all the door?s parts. Note the rails haven?t been ripped to width yet. This will give me a little more surface to ride the router on as I routed the cope profile into the ends.
I also used a scrap block the same thickness for even more support for the router as it exited the cut. After routing the copes I ripped the rails to width.
To routing the sticking I made a simple fixture from some scrap 4/4? stock the same thickness as the rails and stiles and some plywood. The fixture helped hold the pieces and supported the router. All went as planned. Although the 2200 is very large and heavy router it handles much easier than one might expect. The fine adjustment for the bit made matching up the profiles super easy.
Then the more challenging part, routing the raised panel. I went for it all, routing full depth in one pass. I was a bit hesitant at first. I took it easy one the end grain since I was worried about chipping. As it turned out it wasn?t a challenge at all. The 2200 handled task without breaking a sweat and with great results. The bit was so large that the chip catcher wouldn?t fit on. Even without the chip catcher the dust collection was respectable.
I shot some video, here?s a condensed version of the process.
Making a cabinet door with the Festool OF 2200 router
Okay, this was fun but is there really any practical application for freehand routing cabinet doors? I think there is. I?ve got a small router table. Much too small for long stiles or large panels that one might come across on a pantry unit. Or maybe for arched top doors, freehand routing could be easier in that application. I?m not going to throw away my router table after this exercise but it does open up other possibilities, you know, food for thought?.
Copyright 2010
I recently needed to make a mockup of a cabinet door for a client. I thought this might be a good time to try out an idea I?ve been thinking about for some time now-making a cabinet door freehand with a handheld router. Not just any router, the Festool OF 2200 router.

The mockup was made from 3/4? pine. I have an American Eagle rail and stile bit set with a bead profile and CMT 3 ?? raised panel bit that I used for this project. The OF 2200 was very easy to fine tune the height of the bits and the extended base gave the router extra support. That?s just what I needed for this project. Here are all the door?s parts. Note the rails haven?t been ripped to width yet. This will give me a little more surface to ride the router on as I routed the cope profile into the ends.

I also used a scrap block the same thickness for even more support for the router as it exited the cut. After routing the copes I ripped the rails to width.

To routing the sticking I made a simple fixture from some scrap 4/4? stock the same thickness as the rails and stiles and some plywood. The fixture helped hold the pieces and supported the router. All went as planned. Although the 2200 is very large and heavy router it handles much easier than one might expect. The fine adjustment for the bit made matching up the profiles super easy.

Then the more challenging part, routing the raised panel. I went for it all, routing full depth in one pass. I was a bit hesitant at first. I took it easy one the end grain since I was worried about chipping. As it turned out it wasn?t a challenge at all. The 2200 handled task without breaking a sweat and with great results. The bit was so large that the chip catcher wouldn?t fit on. Even without the chip catcher the dust collection was respectable.
I shot some video, here?s a condensed version of the process.
Making a cabinet door with the Festool OF 2200 router
Okay, this was fun but is there really any practical application for freehand routing cabinet doors? I think there is. I?ve got a small router table. Much too small for long stiles or large panels that one might come across on a pantry unit. Or maybe for arched top doors, freehand routing could be easier in that application. I?m not going to throw away my router table after this exercise but it does open up other possibilities, you know, food for thought?.
Copyright 2010